NONPARTISAN We the People First

For Candidates

WE THE PEOPLE

ARE THE BOSS

Use your vote to force real reforms in Washington.
Even small numbers of coordinated voters can decide close elections.
A Fully Written Constitutional Amendment — Available Now
Powered by a growing national movement of Americans committed to real reform.
Read the Full Amendment

Launching July 4, 2026 ·

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What Amendment 28 Does

Eliminates federal income tax on the first $40,000
Protects Social Security and Medicare
Lowers taxes for middle-class families
Simplifies federal tax filing for working Americans
Imposes term limits on Congress and the Supreme Court
Ends gerrymandering
Allows only individual Americans — not corporations, PACs, or dark money — to fund federal elections
Bans insider trading, self-enrichment, and special deals for members of Congress
Requires bills to be public for 120 hours before Congress votes
Stops government shutdowns for political leverage
Establishes independent anti-corruption oversight with full public transparency
Requires balanced federal budgets, except in emergencies, and reduces the national debt over time
Protects future generations from unsustainable debt and dysfunction

The Amendment 28 Support Letter

An open letter to candidates and fellow citizens

We, the American people who sign this letter, are committed to supporting candidates for state and federal office who support Amendment 28 — the People’s Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.

Add your name.

Still have questions?

Click a question to see the answer.

No — you can simply enter your email to receive information and updates about Amendment 28.

Public pledges will begin when the campaign launches on May 21, 2026.

No — adding your name in support of Amendment 28 is completely free.

No donation is required.

Yes — your email will only be used to send occasional updates about Amendment 28.

It will never be sold or shared, and you can unsubscribe at any time.


Yes. Amendment 28 is designed to create coordinated voter support around clearly defined reforms. When voters pledge together, candidates seeking those votes have a strong incentive to support the reforms publicly. This approach focuses on broad public agreement to build practical, achievable change.

Yes. When voters join forces by committing to vote only for candidates who support Amendment 28, candidates quickly take notice. Candidates who need those votes — including yours — will support the amendment or risk losing elections.

Yes. Amendment 28 is a complete fiscal framework—not just a tax change.

It pairs tax relief with enforceable spending controls, waste reduction, and fair tax treatment for higher-income earners—so the government can meet its obligations—pay its bills—while lowering the burden on working Americans.

No — Amendment 28 was written to appeal to Americans across the political spectrum.

Its goal is to restore accountability, fairness, and integrity in government.

Amendment 28 is being introduced now because the proposal is complete and ready for public review. Early supporters are helping build momentum and refine outreach before the official public launch on June 21, 2026.

This phased approach allows time for informed discussion, broader awareness, and stronger national support.

No — Amendment 28 is designed to appeal across the political spectrum.

Its goal is to restore accountability, fairness, and integrity in government.

Because Congress can repeal ordinary laws at any time.

Only a constitutional amendment can establish rules that Congress itself must obey.

Like all constitutional amendments, Amendment 28 must first be approved by Congress.

It must then be ratified by 38 states before becoming part of the Constitution.

Amendment 28 is currently being shared with constitutional scholars, policy experts, journalists, and other interested readers for review and discussion.

Initial versions were drafted by Patrick Dague, reviewed by constitutional scholars, and supported with financial modeling assistance.

The full text is available upon request with summary and background materials.

The proposal builds on existing tax-free thresholds and reflects current economic structure.

It maintains broad participation in the tax system while increasing household retention of income.